FAGE FOUR. ~ Corbett's THE BEST RAKE y Rakes clean, i removes the tops a of Dandelions <a and Weeds, and does not tear the Girase, IT SAVES LABOR : Price 75c¢ ORRINE CURES LIQUOR HABIT| CURE EFFECTED OR MONEY RE- FUNDED. There is no such moderation" " No man at all conselence or add to ydur debauch e taking imple remedy--a we need know sanitarium to pay for Can Be Given Secretly, ORRINE COSTS ONLY $1 A BOX. Guarantee in Each Box, Write for free ORRINE Booklet (mailed in plain sealed envelope) tol] | ORRINE CO. 987 ORRINE Bailding, § | Washington D.C. ORRINE is sold by leading druggists everywhere, Special Agent : eset | W. MAHOOD, Cor. Bagot and | Princess Sts. | thing as drinking and "with judg- with judgment ever Drink will not drown your memory, but w with each Get cured at once ORRINE to-day home treat No medicine expense--only Lhe G. COBALTS ON MARGIN listed Cobalt Stock on margin deposits ; also New York Stocks, Grain, Produce, ete., bought and sold, Consult us before investing, We always have the latest news from the mining caps. All stock deliveries made prompt- ly. Wire, telephone or write us your orders at our expenses We carry the . >atriarche & Co.,| STOCK DEALERS, Office, Standard Stock Building, Toronto. Buffalo". Office, 2068 Ellicott Bgquare, Ruffalo, N.Y. We bave direct wires con- ting all our offices 'A e L RSS tn 3 ons ' SENT FREE ON APPLICAT Head Exchange rand Union Hotel pb. Grand Central Station, New York City Rooms, $1.00 a Day | | you're tak- | | | ership, and it singularly enough | Telegram sees no virtue in the trans THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28. 1909. it were THE WHIG, 76th YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published at 806-310 King street, on, Ontario, at $6 per year. Editions at 2.30 and 4 o'clock! p.m. WEERLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 poses. urs- 0 United out and exported i 1907. all of it used for 'the good purpose of helping plants : make foodstuffs, because there is world demand at present for salipetre to make that «wholly non-mutritious thing, gunpowder. "The advancing price of nitrogen for tilizers. derived from any of the old sources has stimulated rescarch for other means of "fixing" nitrogen, as it is termed. These offorts have mat with a considerable degree of sumess, but as yet no way has been found to make artificially "'fixed" nitrogen cheap. 1t is hoped that this way is to be found by the help of bacteria, some of these micro-organisms have been discovered enough to make a practice of "fixing" : oe nitrogen on the roots of plants, just | reputation by inviting the Rleutenant- whero it wanted, and axperiments {governors of the Canadian provinces have proved that these bacteria can io ecome prophets and indieate what ly, iifcially 'produced and sold fertilicers. Prof, Whitney, of the Uni- ted States department of agriculipre, gots so far as to say, in this connce- tion, that the future of agriculture will be bound up 4n the application of the science of soil bacteriology, dug Naither i to w 1 a year. States, charge for bas to added, mak) king price of 87 ond of 5 ir. 'Attached is = I the best Job Print- ing Offices in Canada; rapid, | and cheap work ; nine improved Presses. The British Whig Publishing Co., Ltd. EDW; J. B. PENSE, Managing Director; TORONTO OFFICE, Buite 19 and 20, Queen Olty Oham- bern, 82 Ohurch' 8t., Toronto, H. E. | Smaigaice J. P., representative. | | Daily Wiig, THE PROPHETIC EYE, | Collier's Weekly has made a bid for as that are. benevolent, is {the provinces will be fifty years hence. na These lieutenant-goverdors are all ex- They haye served in the "are familiar governments, and so i | pertenced men. | [with the progress which has been made But they all ap- [pear to be cautious or timid, or they the mood or condition and under- since confederation. -------- TOO BIG A CONTRACT. The latest report of the Department of Trade and Commerce, issued by the {have not thrown themselves into ! trance | taken to read the secrets of the future. {What Canada will hence no man can conjecture. No one be hali a century | imperial government, gives data with regard to the public utilities and the result of municipal Swnership. There is no evidence, in the material before who has lived and laboured in Canada for fifty years, and been conscious of Canada's wonderful development, dare us, as to how the accounts are kept, to to The trans- presume say what may like period of time. The all expecta- come and reports to hand heretofore have pass in a indicated that they Rave been defective change will be wonderful. will in certain cases, that a depreciation formation surpass That all {1 his young country is like the stal- account has not heen kept, and that in tions is ope' can hazard consequence the management has en- countered serious difficulties. to wart youth who is just begining In Leeds (according to the late re- feel the stirrings of manhood, who is ports), the profit from the tramways was $225,000, and from the gas $85,- 000, witle $140, waterworks before begin- One needs faith at a time like this and the that that {just stretching himself ning his toil and doing his best. made from the the This large sum went towards the reduction In Sheflield the tram- for street rail- $180,000, main- and markets, loyalty is lasting, nothing can destroy. of public rates. REFLECTING PUBLIC OPINION. There appears to be some mystifica- ways (another name ways) yielded a profit of which was applied upon the tion about the meaning of public own- var 2 Bin ick of various free municipal en- In Bradford the tramways showed a profit of $55, 000, tion of rates. tenance re : : I terprises and education, vails in Toronto where. the meaning of the term. shoul \ 'g . The . ; ihe ould be understood. The and the people enjoyed a reduc city council has just disposed of a plot of twenty-two acres, on the out- skirts of the municipality to Cawthra Mulock, for $35,000, and to the end that he them valuable and of appear the water- that some of the English cities this depart- Why this since the little said would There is works, and it in may, with his wealth, make ment is operated at a loss. eventually devota lis the case is not apparent, them to some worthy cause. Rumour water service generally is the most " 2 3 1 iti Y v aq . eredite him with the ambition to fol- profitable. This has been the experi- the Strathcona low example of Carnegie and} ence in Kingston, and in every other and give to the people city where the treasury of the depart- some of the blessings they may need But the ment has not been plundered' to make and be unable to scgure. up the losses, the excesses or the ex- travagances of other departments. action; on the contrary it accuses the| Saturday Night is moved to remark of 1909 ownership to opm council of having put public | {hat "there is hardly a large city in not suffering from pitvately-owned public shame, of selling is $500,000 to one who alleged to have sone 'useful purpose in Canada which land worth is [ the disease of utilities. However, some day we will | awake with a jolt to the fact that we the other fel- view, while he is «imply 'engaged in a It able that the council should be wholly | oy : : huge real estate deal. is remark- | have been working for low long enough."" Every case has to be judged by its circumstances. The | and completely deceived, and while one wonders at the charge of the Telogram | success or failure of some utilities does | not depend upon the ownership alone, but upon the contract is too big for the average. he has to remember that not so long Ton, i ago ow a great financial issue, the sea management, and the it wall, reflected public opinion, and it was the only paper in Toronto ttn { EDITORIAL NOTES. M. Clemenceau has gone off to Carls- bad to take its baths. His ont of order, and his temper as will, Both COSB. which did so BACTERIA. which abound : et FRIENDLY liver is | Micro-organisms in the air, carth and water, are of two may be cured by the one pro- the tovoa, which are virtually animalculae, | widely different' kinds--one, pro- The foriy-socond government of the | P7025 - MONTREAL TORONTO. iggy 2c | OTTAWA, WINNIPEG, WASHINGTON, ~~ \& (0 AND DPWARD Baggage to and from Station free. Send 20 stamp for N.Y. Oity Guide Book end Map BIBBY'S CAB STAND Phone 20l. DAY or NIGHT 26™ Wood's Phosphodine, RR The Great English Remed, s the whole he] R yous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Des val Weakness, Emissions, Sper- purlcrrhon, and Effects of Abuse or Kxcesses. Price £1 per box, six for#s. One will please, siy will cure, Sold by all druggists or mailed i plain on receipt of price, New pamphlet merilec The Wood Medicine Co. forme Teo 2 Toronto, Ont. ble an yon --Yhe Coal Pro true in every part lar CRAWFORD, 'Fhone, 9, Foot of Quicen St. it £ vl 7 Tones and invigoral i IN. t s syste makes new | . ot 3 i Wl in old Veins, Cures Nerv. and another larger division, the bac- |... . : I'hird Republic has been formed in | France cabinets must be going on most of the ! teria, which belong to the vegetable v . : ; | . = I'he making and remaking of | | gg | Kingdom. So far as they have beon | | identified, the protozoa seem to be al | ame. | been { In the Rhindress wile-heating case | {bad lot, because they have 1 | chiofly people with | discovered in the act of killing 1 nn . in Toronto said there malaria, yellow fever or] the magisirate On © the other hand, many of the bacteria are some other terrible discase, was some provocation. But there, any excuse for hore 18 Probably; the | woman's tongue again. useful, and, since they are vegetable | or can there be, and can be cultivates like any other | whipping a wife ? plants, a new industry, that of raising ------ | Dr. Armstrong, of Ottawa, rocom- y valuable crops of bacteria, has arisen. : mends {rec speech for the man in the | William M.D., LL. D., tells the uses of | the micrororgan- | | | | | | | | | | | Hanna Thomson, : pulpit. . And free speech for the something about Heckling church it . in the pew? in vegetable division of ! SE . would be an undignified proceeding, article, "Indispensable of of 1 | bactoria being solely causes of deadly isms in his . j . . 3 but it would be mightily interesting. | Baceria,"" in the August number fap i] . that ' » : Everybody's Magazine. Instead Canada's timber lands are about twelve times greater than those of the United States. This not be the condition very long unless a check be will | discases, ho saves, scionce demonstrates 3 | that but for bacteria this éarth would No plant spe witaneously decom- | soon become uninhabitable. ani- esd put upon the export of logs, and mal. or pecially of pulpwood. it dies any more than do \ has itg teachers' trou- | poses after St. ble: changes tha! institute staff, and is worrving in con- : Who the trus- or Thomas The board cannot anticipate, the taking place in the | stones or rocks, and bacteria keop life removing the bodies of each the of bacteria also, going by generation to make room for are next. Some varieties to blame the promise lo increase the supply of food. | SM uence, | stuffs to an extent that dannot now be depart- | board edueation oe | forttold ment. ? Hays, the general manager, the statement, that | Nitrogen necessary ingredient by : tof food, whether vegetable or animal, of s composed of nitrogen, ib may 3B 8 Me. is an authority for when the Grand Trunk Pacifie is com- pleted "it necessary to make | | arrangemonts with some existing com Pacilic and | since three-fifths the atmos phere i will be that there need be no this wo imagined that source of supply will : PPh pany to supply Atlantic and out Unfortunately, however, connections, pitrogon prefers to 'be free, and re will build its own fleots. fuses to bo locked up as a component | { ' The Journal, of St. Thomas, sug- | or animal tissues, except with regard to the high school | of vegetahle in the roundabout ways eaters are multiplying at sudh a rate | teachers' staff, that the board resort | that, it is said, there will soon be no | to mossy toa contract that will be binding for { The higher | allure They | session | available nitrogen provide the | some years demand at the fertilizer, salaries will the mon. will take into the teaching p: food of nations The store of one { nitrogen. niiraté of soda, o* | Chill upon so rapidly that 1,740,000 tons of training for commerce: tpetre, is ® 5 eternity and the da astrously yesterday, church here | het home here provement. | Sanborn. days when the whole plant would be 1 sent ~ » SOME STRIKING CONTRASTS, in 1870 and the City of 19089. Kingston, July 27.--(To the Edi tor): 1 am trespassing! I am amidst the ripening grin on Duff s farm ! Peculiar thoughts, these. 1 am in the dreamy past of poor old King- ston. Rip ¥an Winkle like I am, awakened in thought not only of the Fendi {past ol poor old Een when Far- po D. Rockefeller is to retire. Well,'{ Me" Dull was alive and those fields of i proves avin, he wi Hib {Ernie ware Toul, and when" have enough to put himself through ge Whigihad their able (oe hon Nis ee Temuining ye without haw cople's "minds. These were the days R16 Zo to the workius. of ipoor old Kingston and its quiet (ways of progress, Where once was { Duis farm i now all about me the ] | multitudious foliage of maple leaves, h 9 Bs i : + is Here anid 10. Tu 3000 stage folk of huildings, lawns and gardens and vet there are thousands of foolish { masndam roats, and an unoms 4 Fail young people who believe they have.| 30% oF . we dLoog thes a only to go to New York to embark on joe ee od Kirton i iot 2 theatrical dF that will make |p oonty and progress. What a change m rich an amous. street, and above it, : (and on either hand. And in proxim- Shas Time Have Changed. ity to the old drill building pay a ontreal 'Tlerald, eo (Change ? Learning's ways have tuke fk with umbrella, I leave | BE ing a) : n is a an Clémencent a8 he} PosScssion by the progressive en- took jeave. of the department 'where jcroachment of a campus ground and he hadwraled France for stlires yours: (of a host of fine buildings where There's 'n change for you, from the | YOURE men and young women are days: When kites oraiie their hofise: | taught to . become useful men and ) the 'basid of | Homen. As I walk down Gordon hold arrangements te e |street, or as my friends will have it, atl. : "1 "University "Avenue," and look across [to the. other side, what a change since ILED. 1870°1 And Queen's authorities, not THE ATTEMPT FAIL | satisfied, wants the old Orphans' Latham Did Not Cross the Eng-|Home to be away so that they may {add a little more to their schemes lish Channel. {of progress and beauty.--AN OLD Dover, England, July 28.--Hubert | KINGSTON BOY. : Latham's second attempt to fly | across the English channel ended dis- | : Almost in the moment of victory his monoplane fluttered down into the sea, two miles | beyond the Admiralty pier, like ga bird with a broken wing. Thousands of people crowding the front saw the fall, and were kept in sus- | pense for nearly halt an hour, knowing whether the daring aeronaut had met death or had heen rescued | from the water, A flock of large and small craft raced to the "scene of the disaster and a pinnace from the British battleship Russell picked up the unlucky flyer and put him aboard the French tor. pedo boat destroyer Bscopette. After a surgeon had attended to his yn- juries Latham was brought ashore by the destroyer and taken to the Lord Warden hotel. His face was damaged and bleeding, and his nose was brok- en. The machine, badly wrecked, was hoisted from 'the boat to the dock, Latham's flight, to. the 'moment its sensational finish, ea'ipsed Bleriot's in some respects. The Englishman magle greater speed being only twenty migutes in the air from the time ha left the coast of France, and steered a' straighter course than Bleriot, he was making directly for' Dover when he fell The phy tham reported 'last night not believe - the -aeéronaut hurt. | . SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. x... Worth Trying. Ottawa Citizen, ' It is possible to: fatten poultry by | inserting food with a tube into their crops. What is the matter with fat- tening sufiragettes ? Has Made His Pile. Not All Glitter. St. Thomas Times, lin old Gordon The Thing We Want. Winnipeg Journal. hile we are glad to see municipal and government ownership of certuln things in suitable places, it seems to { be necessary constantly rebut a notion sedulously cultivated by certain interested people, that we are bigots about public ownership' and want it at all places and times.and for all sorts of matters; that we are enemies of pri- vate enterprise, of lighting and power comparles and street railway! com- Js and of all capital. This is not water to not the case. On the contrary, we are the true friends of capital and all solid en- terprises. Municipal men in general are responsible and conservgtive. They wish private capital to have a liberal chance. They only desire a fair deal for the public; and all sound and so!ld capitalists should recognize this and help them to oppose the common anemy--the reckless charter pirate and the occasional Hishonest - company | which "abuses the public, defies the [ people, grasps their property, corrupt- ly or: ilegally, and 1s consequently a {danger to their freedom In most i cases there are fair bargains, good re- i lations mutual between | municipalities and corporations. This { Union has always carefully drawn the ian in attendfnee on lLa- [distinction ¢ that he did | was | Two Priests | Contributed ' The. late lamented Fathers Lynch and O'Connell, of Peterboro, were the immediate predecessors of Rev. Father of as and respect Of Blessed Memory. greatly Bell Rock Budget. Bell Rock, July 27.~Quarterly sex vices will be hol ia the Methodist next Sunday. Rev. Wil liam Sanderson will officiate. A high ly elem] resident in' the porson of Mrd John Pomeroy, passed away at on the 16th inst. E. Martin is putting a new wall under the schoolhouse, a much needed im The: township stone rushing business this Huckleborsy are Miss Morle Muir and har brother, Earle, of Duluth, are visiting their grandmother, Mrs. M. Moir. Miss Mabel Steinburg, of En. terpris is the guest of Mise Oliv Mise Stella Vanvelkenburg is spending a few days at Moscow. Lynch left Douro forty yeas ago and Rather O'Connell twenty years ago, To know them to love them. Hence, over their graves, the follow ing lines are, in the chse of each, apr propriate indeed : "Warm Southern sun Shine kindly here ; Warm Southern wind Blow softly here. was in axour«ions crusher is vicinity. very popular. Green sod above Lie light, lie light : Good night, dear heart Good night--good night." --May they rest in peace, Amen. The sixteen days' anxious wait for the Fraser river salmon men was, on Monday, %ewarded by three miles of | sockeyes Says Company Has Won. = Montreal, July 28: --F, L. Wanklyn, | What Is Itch Dirt ? the vice-president of the Dominion| Jt is the old Anglo-Saxon name for ('oal company, has reached the city | Dandruff and it's a good one. If from Sydney and Glace Bay and | you have dandruff vou have itch dirt when seen stated that there was not [and the little microbes that are part any longer any doubt that the com-|and parcel of dandruff are il ud pany had won out against the strikers | persistently nightiand day and sooner and it was now only a question of | or later will reach the ve ry life of {your hair and destroy its vitality in operation again." From actual .con-{ Then you'll bé bald--bald to stay ditions at the mines the company | for not even the wonderful rejuvenat- would make more rapid progress from | ing properties in Parisian Sage can now on than it had from the tin e | grow hair after the hair bulb or root the strike was declared up to the pre- | is dead. Parisian Sage cures dand- time. ruff. GW Mahood, the druggist, met sells it--recommends it and guarantees Beware of people who pat you on | it; only 50c. a large bottle and vour the back. They may be looking for | money back if it fails to cure Dan- an opportunity to kick your feet' from | 'ruff, Falling Hair and Itching of the under you. Scalp. or the railway company k A } now boing drawn | some of ithe young men who have been | Kielty in the, parish of Douro. Father |[' | straight from the heart. TIME AND MONEY. Both are quite an item these days, and both can be saved by the man, that comes here for his outfitting. You'll save time, because, look where you will and as long as you will, you can not buy Clothes--good clothes at prices less than we name, Our $10, 12.50 and 15 Suits will prove this, for you 'cannot match the quality .and price at the same time, Pe 5 SPECIAL--See our display of Straw Hats at .00. : See our display of Men's Soft Shirts at 39¢, The H. D. Bibby Co. 2. Beeoofecootoroetuntoe ton too toe toeteotoatontuotants stout fut to + FATRTITTITINITTNTETSNITTITr Tt THE SAWYER SHOE STORE Ladies' Tan Oxfords, $3.50, now $2.65. Ladies' Wine Oxfords, $3.50, now $2.75. Ladies' Tan Oxfords, $275, now $1.95, Chocolate Oxfords, $2.00, now'%§1,60. Oxford Sale; Men's Tan, Wine and Pat. Colt Oxfords, $5, now $3.75 ; $4.50, now $3.25; $4.00, now $2.95. THE SAWYER SHOE STORE ARIS HAAAHHAATIHAAANNAAAAAN A BEST OF ALL KISS. AN OLD IDEA Shown to Be Absolutely False By Modern Science. People used to'think that baldness was one of those things which arg handed down from generation to gen- eration, from father to son--just like the falseness of a family heirloom. Science has shown this belief by proving that balduess itself is not a constitutional disease, but the result of a germ invasion of which only Herpicide ean effectually rid the scalp. Washing" only cleans the sg Dandruff, it dopsn't kill the . "Destroy the cause you remove the effect." Newbro's every case, Girl's Nationality Affects Her Mode of Kissing. Though the matter of osculation is, of its nature, better suited to per formance than discussion, it i¢ of in- terest to know that there are kisses-- and kisses. Indeed, the difference in kisses is most surprising. And this difference may be attributed, broadly speaking, to the nationality of = the woman kissed, in the following gene ral classification : . The kiss of the Spanish woman is said to be the most passionate kiss in the world Slow to give her lips, when she does she gives them entire of Herpicide will do this §n It is also a delightful dressing. Sold by leading druggists. Send 0c. in stamps for sample to the Her- sicide Co., Detroit, Mich, $1 bottles maranteed. GG. W. Mahood, special . agent. A yv. "The French woman's kiss is an ex- pericncxd one--sometimes even moe- cenary. They are pleasint, very /plea- sant, but rarely free from coqueyry. The kiss of the English pik stately, decorous, chilly. It is ways proper, always comventional. The Swotch girl is sincere in osculation. Lacking the heights and depths of emotion, it makes up for this deficit by its sincerity. It comes = al her The Ad. "I lunched at Claridge's in London with Charles Klein, the author of 'The Lion and the Mouse," said an wtor on the Cunard: pier. "Klein vas the hero of the London papers. He had got into a taxicab one morn- ing argl said calmly to the driver, 'Edinburgh. It was a trip of a thousand miles--the taxicab record." The aetor coughed. < "Naturally, afterwards," he said, "the talk turned to advertising, Klein told me of an interesting case. "As he was conversing with a ager day, an evangelist shown in. " 'My dear sir,' said the evangelist to the manager, 'I am waking notes and gathering material for a lecture on the evils of the stage. 1 hear that "The Blonde Widow," your present at- traction, is decidedly--ahem--sensa- tional. May 1 ask you for a ticket of admission, that 1 may gauge its immorality * personally?' The manager beamed. : " 'Why, certainly, sir, certainly," he. cried, and turning to his secretary, he said" i " 'Rutherford, give this gentlem an order for a proscenium box an 4 'harge it to advertising.' "' ¢ The Italian woman given her kisses easily.' It is apt to similate fervor, without meaning it. IU js nol always a really serious matte: with her. The kiss of the American girl is sweed, sincere, and ferveni--withont the emotional temperament of . the Spanish girl behind it. But it has something else that more than makes up for thir deficit--the heart and the soul of the woman. 3 "And lastly," as the old country preacher wae wotlt to say, the kiss of the Canadian girl is the sweetest and best of all, according to English and American writers on this novel theme. It most closely resembles {he Ameri- can girls' kiss, bui it has an unaf- fected simplicity peculiarly its own. man- one was The Policeman's Lot. London, July 28.---The ' Norwich watch committee has decided to abol- ish the wearing of 'armlets by the members of the police force, the chief constable declaring that a constable was always on duty, coven when in plain clothes. Men Swear... Women Complain. : hi Just because their corns ache--easy Twenty Days Of Married Life: zs to curé them with Putnam's Corn Ex- | London, July 28.--Mrs. Erma Louise tractor: it acts painlessly in twenty- | Wright, of Harleygardens, Kensing- © four hours. For corms, warts and] ton, who obtai a divorce yester-! callouses the only thing is Putnam's: husband day, wae desorted by her try it. twenty days after her marriage.